Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Once Said He Doesn't Remember The Movies He's Watched, Before Revealing Why

Benzinga
2025.08.30 12:31
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang revealed in a recent interview that he is constantly thinking about work, even while watching movies, stating, "I work from the moment I wake up to the moment I go to sleep." He aims to transform Nvidia into a leading AI company, which he believes could help him achieve work-life balance. Huang's intense work culture has contributed to Nvidia's valuation exceeding $4 trillion, with former employees noting the demanding environment that includes late-night emails and seven-day workweeks, similar to the work ethic of Elon Musk.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang once admitted in an interview that he no longer separates life from work and that he thinks about Nvidia even while watching movies.

Jensen Huang Describes Why He’s Always Thinking Of Work

“I work from the moment I wake up to the moment I go to sleep,” Huang said to Stripe CEO Patrick Collison in an interview last year.

“I work seven days a week,” Huang adds in a clip that's resurfaced on social media and gone viral.

“When I’m not working, I’m thinking about working… I sit through movies, but I don’t remember them because I’m thinking about work.”

Ambition To Turn Nvidia Into ‘One Giant AI’

The 62‑year‑old billionaire described those reveries as productive, noting, “Sometimes you’re imagining the future and boy, if we did this and that. And it’s working. You’re fantasizing, you’re dreaming." His ambition, he added, is to “turn Nvidia into one giant AI,” believing that might finally deliver downtime.

“How great would that be? And then I’ll have work‑life balance,” he quipped.

Huang’s intensity has steered Nvidia from a graphics‑card upstart to the world’s most valuable public company, topping a $4 trillion valuation on July 9 and currently at $4.08 trillion.

Relentless Culture Credited With Record Market Valuation

"The thing is, when you want to build something great, it’s not easy to do. And when you’re doing something that’s not easy to do, you’re not always enjoying it," Huang explains.

Former workers say that culture means emails at 1 am and seven‑day workweeks, conditions some endure for stock grants. Bloomberg said engineers stay until 2 am to meet deadlines.

Huang’s marathon schedule echoes the grind embraced by Tesla and SpaceX boss Elon Musk, who said this month he is “back to working seven days a week and sleeping in the office.” In May, Musk likewise told followers he was “spending 24/7 at work, sleeping in conference, server or factory rooms” to keep projects on track.

Both men’s philosophies mirror earlier accounts in which Musk urged founders to “work like hell” because “nobody ever changed the world on 40 hours a week,” a mantra Huang appears to embody.

Disclosure: The article was originally published on Benzinga.com on July 25, 2025.

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